Jersey Boys @ HMT – Duncan Harley Reviews
The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame arrives
in Aberdeen this week in the form of the 1960s era, jukebox-laden musical Jersey Boys, and
from curtain rise to curtain fall this highly polished and electrifyingly energetic
production features around 30 original Frankie
Valli and The Four Seasons numbers.
With a
pedigree of 27 Top 40 singles including Big Girls Don’t Cry, Walk
Like a Man and Rag Doll, the original Four Seasons’
tough-but-tender doo-wop harmonies continue to wow Rock ‘n’ Roll fans of all
ages.
Add to the mix around 100 million record sales, and
it’s difficult to see how Director Des McAnuff’s musical portrayal of the
groups often troubled rise and fall could fail to please the theatre audience.
In fact, this is one of those shows that should be
seen again and again. I should know – to date I’ve seen this tribute show three
times and given a whiff of a chance, I would go back at least one more time.
As always, casting makes or breaks a musical, and
the choice of Michael Watson to play lead Frankie Valli is more than
satisfying. Bearing a passing resemblance to the younger Frankie, Michael’s
stage presence and ferocious vocal range steal the show. Alongside the
fast-paced numbers - Bye Bye Baby/Working
My Way Back to You/Rag Doll – Michael’s mellow Can’t Take My Eyes Off You had the audience spellbound.
Peter Nash as the slightly dodgy Tommy De Vito, James
Winter as Who Wears Shorts Shorts composer
Bob Gaudio and Lewis Griffiths as the Ringo-like Nick Massi completed the band
line-up and in numbers such as Sherry and Bye Bye Baby, the quartet’s performance bordered
on the magical. At times it was difficult to separate performance from reality.
And don’t you just love those smart-smart red blazers!
The narrative is neatly subdivided Vivaldi-like
into Spring, Summer, Fall and Winter, with each band member taking a turn to
relate his own particular version of the band’s rise and fall. As the
rags-to-riches-to-rags story plays out and the discord between band members
becomes unbearably raw, the musical score stays apace.
Spring’s I Can’t Give you Anything But Love leads us on to
Summer's Oh What a Night. Fall’s Big Man
in Town gives way to Winter’s Fallen Angel and Who Loves You.
This Vivaldi-esque approach inevitably elasticates
the truth. The gang connections, for example, might be ever so slightly
romanticised. Two rather than just the one of Frankie Valli’s daughters
actually died, one by apparent suicide and another by drug overdose. And perhaps
inevitably, the genuine Tommy DeVito strenuously denied, in the Las Vegas
Review, being the band-member who habitually peed in the sink: “I was
probably the cleanest guy there … I don’t even know how they come up with this
kinda’ stuff.”
The storyline exists in an explosive
bubble of doo-wop and aside from a reference to Bob Gaudio’s pre-Seasons chart-topping Short Shorts and some insight into the underworld of buying airplay
on prime-time radio, we are pretty much left in the dark about the general
music scene in the far off 1960s. Asides such as ‘come back when your black’
and ‘there are only two kinds of girl’ firmly set the general tone of the
times. Suspend moral indignation mode prior to taking seat, might be good
advice!
Choreography, lighting, sound and costumes were pin
sharp and all in all, Jersey Boys is
a show well worth seeing.
Sit back and go on a roller coaster ride of some
favourite songs and some great back-story from the 60’s and the 70’s. Oh what a
night and what a well worked tale.
Stars: 4.5/5
Jersey Boys plays at HM Theatre
Aberdeen until Saturday 25th August
Words © Duncan Harley, Images © HMT
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